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Journal of Eurasian Studies JOURNAL OF EURASIAN STUDIES _____________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of the Gábor Bálint de Szentkatolna Society Founded: 2009. Internet: www.federatio.org/joes.html _____________________________________________________________________________________ Volume VI., Issue 2. / April — June 2014 ____________________ ISSN 1877-4199 April-June 2014 JOURNAL OF EURASIAN STUDIES Volume VI., Issue 2. _____________________________________________________________________________________ Publisher Foundation 'Stichting MIKES INTERNATIONAL', established in The Hague, Holland. Account / International transfer BIC: INGBNL2A IBAN: NL83 INGB 0006 4028 54 Registered: Stichtingenregister: S 41158447 Kamer van Koophandel en Fabrieken Den Haag Distribution The periodical can be downloaded from the following Internet-address: http://www.federatio.org/joes.html If you wish to subscribe to the email mailing list, you can do it by sending an email to the following address: [email protected] The publisher has no financial sources. It is supported by many in the form of voluntary work and gifts. We kindly appreciate your gifts. Address The Editors and the Publisher can be contacted at the following addresses: Email: [email protected] Postal address: P.O. Box 10249, 2501 HE, Den Haag, Holland Individual authors are responsible for facts included and views expressed in their articles. _____________________________________ ISSN 1877-4199 © Mikes International, 2001-2014, All Rights Reserved _____________________________________________________________________________________ © Copyright Mikes International 2001-2014 2 April-June 2014 JOURNAL OF EURASIAN STUDIES Volume VI., Issue 2. _____________________________________________________________________________________ CALL FOR PAPERS We encourage everybody to submit to the Editorial Board ([email protected]) papers in the fields covered by the Journal. The papers will be assessed solely on their academic merits, and these are the prerequisites author(s) must adhere to: 1. An analytical article should have at least 5,000 words including notes, 2. The author(s) must elaborate the theme of the article logically, 3. References must be uniform and clear (the author(s) should follow consistently a particular pattern, like Chicago style, or Harvard style), 4. Author(s) must take all care to develop their ideas on their own; there should be no cases of plagiarism, 5. Wikipedia is not a scientifically authoritative source; referencing it must be avoided, unless Wikipedia or its usage/influence is the topic of the paper, 6. The article can be written in any language. In case it is written in a language other than English, an English summary of at least A4 length is required, 7. A brief (max. 10 sentences long) professional CV in English. _____________________________________________________________________________________ © Copyright Mikes International 2001-2014 3 April-June 2014 JOURNAL OF EURASIAN STUDIES Volume VI., Issue 2. _____________________________________________________________________________________ EDITORIAL BOARD Editor-in-Chief FARKAS, Flórián The Hague, Holland Deputy Editor-in-Chief OBRUSÁNSZKY, Borbála Budapest, Hungary Editors ALIMBAY, Nursan Almaty, Kazakhstan ARADI, Éva Budapest, Hungary BÉRCZI, Szaniszló Budapest, Hungary BÍRÓ, András Budapest, Hungary CSORNAI, Katalin Budapest, Hungary CZEGLÉDI, Katalin Pécs, Hungary ERDÉLYI, István Göd, Hungary HORVÁTH, Izabella Hangzhou, China KARATAY, Osman İzmir, Turkey MAHAPATRA, Debidatta Aurobinda Boston, MA, USA MARÁCZ, László Amsterdam, Holland MARCANTONIO, Angela Rome, Italy MURAKEÖZY, Éva Patrícia The Hague, Holland SARBASSOVA, Guldana Amsterdam, Holland SECHENBAATAR Hohhot, China UCHIRALTU Hohhot, China ZOMBORI, Andor Nagoya, Japan _____________________________________________________________________________________ © Copyright Mikes International 2001-2014 4 April-June 2014 JOURNAL OF EURASIAN STUDIES Volume VI., Issue 2. _____________________________________________________________________________________ CONTENTS Dear Reader, ............................................................................................................................................. 6 HISTORY ............................................................................................................ 8 ARDEN-WONG, Lyndon Tang Governance and Administration in the Turkic Period ...................................................... 9 LINGUISTICS ................................................................................................. 21 KISAMOV, Norm The Hunnic Oracle............................................................................................................................. 22 ETHNOGRAPHY ............................................................................................ 37 SARBASSOVA, Guldana Aktaevna Culture Concerned with the Horse as a “Prism” of the Kazakhs’ National Heritage .......... 38 PHILOSOPHY ................................................................................................. 44 MIRABILE, Paul Friedrich Nietzsche and Wisdom of the East ............................................................................... 45 TRAVELOGUE ................................................................................................ 74 TAPON, Francis Debunking Kosovo’s Demographic Myths .................................................................................. 75 Our Authors ........................................................................................................................................... 86 _____________________________________________________________________________________ © Copyright Mikes International 2001-2014 5 April-June 2014 JOURNAL OF EURASIAN STUDIES Volume VI., Issue 2. _____________________________________________________________________________________ DEAR READER, JOURNEY TO THE WEST The Silk Road is probably the most famous historical network of commercial roads and it is quite natural that on 22 June 2014, UNESCO designated the Chang'an-Tianshan corridor of the Silk Road as a World Heritage Site. Nowadays we can witness a renewed interest in the history of the Silk Road. Countless exhibitions and conferences are held, academic papers are written about it. Now I would like to draw the attention on two phenomena concerning the Silk Road. The latest exhibition in the Amsterdam Hermitage Museum is titled ‘Expedition Silk Road — Journey to the West. Treasures from the Hermitage.’ It is held between 1 March – 5 September 2014. This time again the State Hermitage Museum provided its satellite museum in Amsterdam with a lavish collection. Having built on the work of Russian archaeologists for more than a century, the Museum in St. Petersburg owns a unique collection of basically everything that is connected to the Silk Road’s Central Asian section. The cultural richness of this collection is exhibited in Amsterdam with a unique focus: ‘Journey to the West’ — a journey not to the European West but to the West of China, to Central Asia and India. The title — and hence the inspiration for the focus —was borrowed from the 16th century classical Chinese novel written by Wu Cheng’en, recounting the pilgrimage of the Buddhist monk Xuanzang to India that lasted from 629 to 645. The artifacts displayed provide indeed a grandiose ‘journey to the West’ to all visitors who are privileged to visit this exhibition. My personal favorite was the painted clay and wood figurine of the monkey ‘Sun Wukong’ (Monkey in Western Garb) unearthed at Khara Koto during the expedition of Pyotr Kozlov (1907-1909) and dated 13th-14th century. Silk was indeed traded along the Silk Road, but it was by far not the most common traded good. And the commercial aspect of the Silk Road cannot shun its more profound aspect and impact: that of the interchange of cultural, religious, and other spiritual ideas, skills, and crafts. In essence we can even conclude that the Silk Road is the ultimate symbol of globalization put in a right context. This was also the motivating factor for the renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma when he initiated in 1998 the Silk Road Project, Inc. in order to promote collaboration among artists and institutions, multicultural artistic exchange, and to study the ebb and flow of ideas among different cultures along the Silk Road. Of the many artists and artistic productions resulting of this initiative is a team of musicians who collaborate under the name ‘Ghazal’ and produce a unique and wonderful combination of Persian and Indian improvisative music. The main musicians include Kayhan Kalhor (Iran) playing the kamancheh, Shujaat Husain Khan (India) playing sitar, and Sandeep Das (India) playing the tabla. Their four CDs up until now under the Ghazal brand include Ghazal: Lost Songs of the Silk Road, 1997; Ghazal 2: As Night Falls on the Silk Road, 1998; Ghazal 3: Moon Rise over the Silk Road, 2000; and Ghazal: The Rain, 2003. _____________________________________________________________________________________ © Copyright Mikes International 2001-2014 6 April-June 2014 JOURNAL OF EURASIAN STUDIES Volume VI., Issue 2. _____________________________________________________________________________________ We are living in a very fortunate era when we can enjoy such exhibitions like the ‘Journey to the West’ presenting the enormous cultural richness of the peoples who lived and exchanged high cultures along the Silk
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